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IDB Workshop Focus on Community
Development
The development of Muslim communities in non-Muslim countries is
the focus of a four-day workshop organized by the Islamic
Development Bank (IDB).
Representatives of leading Muslim NGOs from 15 countries are
taking part in the workshop which was opened here yesterday by
Dr. Muhammad Hassan Salem, acting director of IDB’s Special
Assistance and Scholarship Program Office (SASPO).
Salem said the IDB had, through its special assistance and
scholarship programs, provided grants of over $250 million for
the socio-economic development of Muslim communities in 60
non-member countries. He emphasized SASPO’s readiness to provide
assistance to well-planned projects beneficial to the community.
“Muslim communities must work hard to match other communities in
making use of available resources in an efficient manner,” he
said.
Most of the participants in the workshop were in the Kingdom to
perform Hajj. “Since many responsible members of Muslim NGOs
come for Hajj each year, the IDB decided to utilize their
presence in Saudi Arabia by bringing them together in a
workshop-setting to exchange experiences, develop new ideas,
create renewed commitments, sharpen skills and establish a
global community development network,” Salem said.
He highlighted IDB’s efforts to boost the development of the
Ummah during the past 32 years by financing a large number of
welfare and infrastructure projects. He also referred to the
growing popularity of Islamic banking as leading conventional
banks such as HSBC and Citibank have opened Islamic banking
departments.
The workshop was aimed at educating participants how community
development ideas could be institutionalized for sustainable
benefit to the needy and how education plays a key role in the
socio-economic development process. It will also discuss
problems facing Muslim NGOs in order to suggest viable
solutions. Participants will learn how to prepare, appraise,
implement, monitor and evaluate IDB-financed special assistance
projects.
NGOs attending the workshop include those from Canada, India,
Mauritius, Nigeria, New Zealand, Somalia and Ethiopia. These
organizations offer a variety of services to the community in
the fields of education, poverty alleviation, community
empowerment, relief work, manpower training and Islamic
propagation.
A team of experts from the Saudi-German Hospitals Group
including Professor Nanda Gopal, director of Saudi
Entrepreneurship Development Institute (SEDI), gave
presentations on the company’s community development initiatives
such as SEDI, Family Business Academy, Charity Blood Bank,
Saudi-German Institute for Nursing & Allied Health Sciences and
Abdul Jaleel Batterjee Fund.
Gopal urged NGOs to make their communities self-reliant. “If you
give a man a fish a day you feed him for the day but if you
teach him how to fish you feed him for life,” he explained.
“This is a very useful workshop as it focuses on human
development and trains community leaders in how to make optimum
use of their resources,” said Abdul Hameed Bala Abubakar,
permanent secretary at the Ministry of Health in the Nigerian
state of Kaduna.
Daud Azimullah of the Federation of Islamic Associations of New
Zealand said his organization would certainly benefit from the
workshop in terms of receiving new ideas and exchange of
experiments by participants.
Adel Sindi, program officer at the Scholarship Program Office,
welcomed the guests and Mamoon Al-Azami, community development
specialist at SASPO, gave a brief description of what the
workshop is about.
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